Robert Kraft (Photo: Tom Pennington/Getty Images)
Blizzard Entertainment has announced the franchise owners for the first seven teams in the Overwatch League, and the list includes a couple of familiar names. New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft will own the Boston Overwatch team, and New York Mets COO Jeff Wilpon will serve as franchise owner for the New York City Overwatch team.
Three of the seven clubs are endemic Overwatch teams: the Immortals (Los Angeles), Misfits Gaming (Miami-Orlando), and NRG Esports (San Francisco). The remaining two Overwatch teams have owners based in Asia. Tech company NetEase will own the Shanghai team. Kevin Chou, co-founder of the mobile game developer Kabam, will own the Seoul team.
This news follows on the heels of rumours that the Overwatch League requires teams to put down a $US20 ($26) million franchise fee. Several heavy hitters in esports have let go of their Overwatch teams since the announcement of the Overwatch League, including compLexity, Team SoloMid, Red Reserve, Denial Esports and Splyce back in May. Dignitas, Rise Nation, and Ninjas in Pyjamas released their Overwatch teams in June.
According to a press release from Activision Blizzard, the first season of Overwatch League will kick off “later this year,” and “regular-season matches will be played at an esports arena in the Los Angeles area” on Thursdays, Fridays, and Saturdays. In addition to these regular season matches, franchised teams “will have a licence to operate and monetise up to five amateur events in their home territory each year.”
Expect to see Overwatch League paraphernalia available for sale in-game. According to the press release, “the sale of league-affiliated fan items in Overwatch” will provide a source of revenue to the league, in addition to “advertising, ticketing and broadcast rights revenues.”
Comments
6 responses to “Bob Kraft, Jeff Wilpon Now Own Professional Overwatch League Teams”
The way they have chosen cities for the League is filth, largest demographic in the world gets one team, but US cities that are relatively close to each other get split. This whole thing stinks of corporate interests rather than growing Overwatch within the esports scene.
On the other hand, if you want to get taken seriously as a sport you need those corporate interests. They have the best venues, money for advertising, will pay the most for entry (which gives the most flashy tournaments and technology) and attract the best players.
It still is a bargain with the devil of course, and they’ll probably ruin a lot of things.
WILPON SPEND MONEY ON THE GOD DAMN METS YOU FUCKER.
Go Cowboys!
You spelt Patriots wrong.
Patriots can go and **** a **** right in their ******* ****** *********!
😉
But seriously, we’ll be back in the playoffs this year, and BB will have to slip up sooner or later.